The Republican members of the state Assembly panel that’s investigating the ongoing George Washington Bridge controversy have found out they will have to wait until Wednesday to review hundreds of pages of subpoenaed documents, said Assemblyman Scott Rumana, R-Wayne.

That leaves only one day for them to review the material before Thursday’s scheduled committee meeting, which is not enough time, Rumana said.

“Allowing Republican committee members less than 24 hours to review more than 900 pages of information is a disservice to the bipartisan committee process,” he said. “Giving us a few hours to examine the documents certainly calls into question the fairness of the process.”

The Assembly Transportation Committee has been investigating the September lane diversions at the George Washington Bridge, which is administered by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and so far two of Governor Christie’s top appointees have stepped down in the wake of the investigation into what they called a traffic study.

Local officials claimed the traffic backups that ensued hampered public safety efforts and that Port Authority officials did not notify them of the traffic study before it started. The Assembly panel exercised its authority under state law to issue subpoenas, both for testimony from key agency officials and for hundreds of pages of documents. Former Livingston mayor and political blogger David Wildstein, who Christie appointed to a top job at the Port Authority in 2010, has been called to appear before the committee Thursday.

Rumana, who is the Assembly’s Republican whip, first aired concerns that GOP committee members were not being provided the subpoenaed documents on Monday. In response, Tom Hester, a spokesman for the Assembly Democrats, said the documents “are still being reviewed in totality.”

“The Republicans will certainly get them with enough time to review before Thursday’s hearing,” Hester said.